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Microplastics are transferred by soil fauna and regulate soil function as material carriers
Summary
Springtail soil invertebrates were found to actively transport microplastics through soil and to transfer them and their adsorbed contaminants during feeding activity. Microplastic-laden springtails also suppressed soil organic matter decomposition, demonstrating that soil fauna mediate both the spatial redistribution and the functional impacts of microplastic pollution.
The ecotoxicological effects of microplastics, a new and widespread ecosystem pollutant, have been extensively reported. However, it remains unclear whether soil fauna transfer microplastics and whether migration behaviours influence subsequent ecological functions in terrestrial ecosystems. We investigated the transfer patterns of microplastics and their adsorbed substances by soil animals (the springtail, Folsomia candida) and the effect of the transfer on the decomposition of soil organic matter through a standardized cotton strip assay. The results showed that springtails had a strong ability to transfer microplastics into the soil. The adsorbed nutrient (nitrogen; N), pollutant (cadmium; Cd), and green fluorescent Escherichia coli (GFP-E. coli) were also transferred with the microplastics. In addition, cotton strip decomposition was accelerated when the microplastics adsorbed N, but the adsorption of Cd decreased decomposition. These ecological effects were particularly strong for small microplastics. Microplastic transfer regulated soil bacterial communities, promoting the growth of Ascomycota fungi and inhibiting that of Basidiomycota, leading to cotton strip decomposition. Thus, microplastic pollution may occur at one site, but microplastics can be transferred anywhere in terrestrial ecosystems by soil animals and adsorb other substances, including nutrients and pollutants, that affect ecosystem function. Therefore, more studies on the migration behaviour of microplastics are necessary.
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